Read an Excerpt
Liad
Department of Interior Command Headquarters
There was time, but neither night nor day.
Time. Current time on twenty planets was counted along the
digital
displays in the long left wall. The light was impartial, unchanging.
Shadowless. In addition to the silent, steady chronometers,
the room
contained a desk upon which sat two screens-one large, one smaller-a keypad, some few files of hard copy, a stylus;
behind the
desk was a chair; in the chair was a man. Those who owed
allegiance to
the Department, to the Plan, addressed him as “Commander” or, formally, “Commander of Agents”. That was enough.
Commander of Agents touched his keypad, advancing the file displayed upon the larger screen.
Blindfolded and questioned-if any would dare it-he could
easily
have recited the entire contents of the file. He perused it
without
reading it, as another might shuffle and deal hand after hand of
Patience, mind wrestling a problem light years beyond his busy
fingers.
The immediate problem was threefold, the sections named thus:
Clan Korval, Val Con yos’Phelium, Tyl Von sig’Alda.
Clan Korval. The Department of Interior had long been aware of
the danger presented by Clan Korval, that maverick and most oddly
successful of Clans. The Department of Interior had taken
measures-bold measures-in the past, with an eye toward nullifying
Korval’s menace. The culmination of these measures was the
recruitment of Korval’s young nadelm into the Department and the
subsequent redesign of that same Val Con yos’Phelium into an
Agent of
Change. That stroke, brilliant and necessary, had produced
uncalculated results. Korval became aware of the Department. And,
being Korval, measures-bold measures-had been taken. The
Department found its name spoken in public places; long-stable
funding
sources came under scrutiny, several dummy accounts were unmasked and summarily closed by the Masters of the Accountant’s Guild, the funds returned to the Council of Clans.
Not satisfied with such unseemly commotion, Korval moved again-and more boldly yet. The Clan vanished-ships, children, servants, pets-all, all gone from Liad.
Not quite all.
Commander of Agents touched his keypad. One of the Line Direct
remained upon Liad: Anthora, youngest of the adult yos’Galans, who
had prudently removed to the ancient and formidable Jelaza Kazone,
Korval’s first base of planetary operation, and was living
there retired.
For now.
Commander of Agents advanced the file, eyes looking beyond
screen and data. Korval was out there somewhere. Who knew what
they
might do? Or when? The Commander considered the probability that
they had gone entirely, leaving behind one too odd to
understand her
peril. Were Korval to abandon Liad and accept sanctuary from Terra
the balance long in favor of Liaden trade missions and Liaden
expansion would be at risk. The children of yos’Galan were
half-Terran.
Mongrels. They might well go to kin.
The Commander was not one to feel qualms. The various actions
against Korval, including fomenting revolution on the world of
Korval’s
oldest trade partner, were necessary to reduce Korval’s
influence and
bring about the true ascendancy of Liad.
The recent revolt had not been an entire success, for
Korval’s old
ally and sometime bedmates had prevailed. Still, it would be a
generation before the economy of the planet healed, and the
political
conflicts would take a dozen dozen relumma to settle.
More, there was rumor that one string not yet strung to
the bow of
the alliance was now gone. The Commander allowed himself a faint
smile: fight them over and over, covertly, and even Korval
must fall.
They had almost been eliminated twice now.
The Commander blinked. This time, perhaps. On his watch.
This nearly open flight was unfortunate, and unexpected. That
Korval searched for their missing delm-to-be was certain. To
allow them
to locate and reclaim Val Con yos’Phelium would be an error. A
very
serious error.
A most successful Agent, Val Con yos’Phelium. There was
that in
the madcap Korval genes that inspired its members to excellence,
whatever course they might chart. Before the adjustment of his
loyalties, Val Con yos’Phelium had ridden the mandate of his
genes to a
certain pinnacle of achievement: Scout Commander, First-In. A
man of
infinite resource, a pilot from a Clan that bred for pilots;
intelligent,
flexible and-after suitable training-exquisitely deadly, he
had among
his armament the greatest of all an Agent’s weapons, the
Probability
Loop.
The Loop allowed an Agent to calculate odds of mission success
and personal survival. To some extent, it served as a predictor of
coming action, and as a strategy program. There were, of course,
certain other mandates implanted, as well as a self-destruct
subroutine.
These mandates and subroutines were provided to ensure that an
Agent
remained loyal to his mission, to the Department and to the
Plan. It
should not be possible for an Agent of Change to break training.
And, yet, there was evidence-disturbingly strong evidence-that
Val Con yos’Phelium, delm genetic of a Clan that seemingly valued
random action just slightly less than piloting skill, had
broken training.
So. Agent of Change Tyl Von sig’Alda had been dispatched
on the
trail of a rumor, to seek Val Con yos’Phelium along the ways of an
Interdicted World, to offer transport to the home world, to
debriefing
and recalibration. Had the Agent merely come against
mischance, these
things would be accepted. Had he suffered severe mischance, Agent
sig’Alda was to bring his Commander a body, a skull, sections of
vertebrae-proof. An Agent was no such thing to be carelessly
left lying
about the galaxy, after all. Especially no such Agent as Val Con yos’Phelium.
Commander of Agents came to the end of the file, closed it
with a
flick at the keypad. He leaned back in the chair which
conformed to his
body’s shape and briefly closed his eyes.
Agent sig’Alda had been gone some time. It was understood that ransacking a low tech world for one man-or one corpse-might consume time.
The Commander was prepared to wait some small time longer, before loosing another Agent to the search.
Commander of Agents opened his eyes, seeking the smaller
second
screen.. This screen showed a sector map. Marked plainly on
the map
was Interdicted World I-2796-893-44, where Tyl Von sig’Alda sought Val Con yos’Phelium. An amber light near the world marked the location of sig’Alda’s ship, as reported by the concealed pin-beam locator beacon. Some time ago, the beacon had reported that it was on-world and Commander of Agents had allowed himself hope.
Alas, the ship lifted very soon, thence to dawdle in orbit now
several more days, so the scent which had enticed Agent
sig’Alda to the
planet’s surface must have proved false.
Commander of Agents moved his eyes to the chronometered wall.
He was due in conference very shortly, where another portion
of the
Department’s Plan would be reviewed.
Korval’s links with outside interests were being attended to,
carefully. It was the Commander’s thought that Korval had
dwindled to
the point of being too few to attend to their own security.
Thus a test
case. It would do Korval no good, should Dutiful Passage fall.
Hands on the armrests, the Commander pushed his chair back, glancing to the beacon screen-and freezing.
For the beacon’s light was no longer the placid amber
indicative of
a stable position. It blazed green on the star map, its glow
eclipsing the
world called “Vandar” by its natives, the pre-Jump coil-charge
smearing the telltale into a blur. Coordinates appeared at the
bottom of
the screen, the beacon phased from green to turquoise, then
flared into
nothing as it and the ship around it entered Jump.
Commander of Agents reached forth a hand, tapped a command
into his keypad. The home system of the Interdicted World
melted from
the screen, replaced by another map, this with a ship route
limned in
red.
Commander of Agents leaned back in his chair, and allowed
himself
to believe that all was well.
Tyl Von sig’Alda was Jumping for Waymart. From Waymart it was but two Jumps to Headquarters.
Copyright © 1999 by Sharon Lee & Steve Miller